Nototodarus hawaiiensis(Berry, 1912)

Introduction

Nototodarus hawaiiensis is often island-associated and captured over seamounts or island slopes but is also caught off the continental shelf of Australia. During the day, in Hawaiian waters, it has been observed sitting or swimming near the sea floor. At night its habits are unknown but it is not seen around surface night-lights. Maximum size known is about 250 mm ML, commonly reaches 150 mm ML (Dunning and Förch, 1998).

Protective membranes and their supports of uniform height, not higher than suckers.

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Figure. Left - Oral-oblique view of a large sucker ring from arm III of N. hawaiiensis. Photograph by R. Young. Right - Drawing of an arm sucker ring of N. hawaiiensis, holotype. Drawing from Berry (1918).

Largest club suckers with 14-18 large conical teeth interspersed with low plates.

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Figure. Oral views of the tentacular club of N. hawaiiensis. Top - i80 mm ML, Philippine waters. Drawing from Voss (1963). Bottom - 140 mm ML, Hawaiian waters. The twisted, preserved club was photographed from two angles to view the entire club. The two pictures were then joined; the black line shows the "joint." Photograph by R. Young.

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Figure. Left - Oral-oblique view of the two largest sucker rings from the same tentacular club of N. hawaiiensis. Photograph by R. Young. Right - Drawing of a large club sucker ring, holotype. Drawing from Berry (1918).

Life History

Paralarvae

N. hawaiiensis paralarvae are characterized by being very broad relative to their length (ie, they are "fat"), having a very short proboscis with very large lateral suckers, and a distinctive band of chromatophores around the middle of the mantle by about 4.0 mm ML (Harman and Young, 1985).

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Figure. Ventral and dorsal views of paralarval stages of N. hawaiiensis. Inserts show proboscis tips. Chromatophore pattern is missing from the dorsal view of the 5.8 mm ML paralarva. Scale bar is 1 mm. Drawings from Harman and Young (1985).

Figure. Ventral and dorsal views of the first juvenile stage of N. hawaiiensis. Note the small tentacles. Scale bar is 1 mm. Drawings from Harman and Young (1985).

Adults

In Australian waters males generally mature by 130 mm ML and females by 150 mm ML (Dunning and Förch, 1998). In Hawaiian waters mature females have been found as small as 113 mm ML ; a mature female of 141 mm ML had 1500 eggs (amber color, 1.1 by 0.9 mm in size) in both oviducts (Young, 1995). Maximum size for a N. hawaiiensis from Hawaiian waters is 160 mm ML (Harman and Young, 1985).

Behavior

Submersible observations in Hawaiian waters (Young, 1995) indicated that during the day N. hawaiiensis are solitary and commonly rest on the ocean floor or swim just 10-20 cm above the bottom. When disturbed by the submersible, a resting squid resisted swimming and sometimes had to be physically prodded before swimming away. They often moved off slowly, vigorously flapping their relatively small fins (like a bird flapping its wings). When sufficiently disturbed, the squid abandoned this method of swimming and, with a strong beat of the fins and a simultaneous jet from the mantle, darted out of sight (see video below).

Distribution

Vertical distribution

N. hawaiiensis is primarily found over continental and island slope waters. It has been captured from depths of 160-700 m off Australia (Dunning and Förch, 1998) with the highest catch rates at depths of 350 and 500m and in Hawaiian waters from depths of about 200-700 m during the day and 0 to 400 m at night (Harman and Young, 1985). During the day it is seen on or near the ocean floor (a video can be seen here of squid in Hawaiian waters at a depth of about 400m ). This squid, in Hawaiian waters, is rarely caught on squid jigs which suggests that they are also demersal at night. In other locations, N. hawaiiensis appears to have been captured mostly by demersal trawls (Dunning and Förch, 1998) and Dunning (1998) also concluded that this species demersal day and night.

Geographical distribution

N. hawaiiensis is known from scattered localities near landmasses in the Indian and Pacific Oceans (Dunning and Försch, 1988; see map). Near Hawaii, Bower, et al. (1999) found paralarvae of N. hawaiiensis to exhibit increased abundance near islands.

References

Berry, S.S. 1918. Report on the Cephalopoda Obtained by the F.I.S. "Endeavour" in the Great Australian Bight and Other Southern Australian Localities. Biological Results of the Fishing Experiments carried on by the F.I.S. "Endeavour", 1909-1914, 4(5):201-298.

Page: Tree of Life
Nototodarus hawaiiensis(Berry, 1912).
Authored by
Richard E. Young and Michael Vecchione.
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